396 MR. S. S. BUCKMAN ON THE BAJOCIAN [Aug. 1895, 



Notgrove Free- 4. Grey, oolitic, shelly ragstone ; nume- ft. ins. ft. ins. 

 stone, rous Trigonim, their tests replaced 



equivalent ? by decomposed iron oxide ; also 



smooth Pectens. The bed is bored 



considerably at the top ,... 1 2 



Gryphite-grit, 5. Greyish arenaceo-calcareous ragstone, 

 contempo- weathering brown, on the whole 



rary deposit. rather bare of fossils. In some 



places it is rather shelly — the bottom 

 bed contains many shell-fragments. 

 Acanthothyris aff. Crossi, Walke»., 

 was found about 3 feet down, scarce; 

 and a block 3 feet 4 inches down 

 yielded a few specimens, also a 

 coarsely clavellate Trigonia, 1 As- 

 tarte elegans, Ostrea, and other 

 lamellibranchiata — impressions or 



fragments 5 9 



Buckmani- 6. Sandy, somewhat oolitic, somewhat 

 grit. shelly stone. Numerous Gryphcece 

 in partings, Belemnites, smooth 

 Pectens : visible 3 1 



Section III a. — Below the road to Bisley, right-hand side. 

 The Coney gre Quarry. 



ft. ins. ft. 



7. Grey, sandy stone, with Grypham 



fairly abundant 2 1 



8. Yellowish, sandy stone 2 6 



9. Rather soft, yellow, sandy stone 8 



10. Sandy stone, variable in thickness, 



6-8 inches ..., 7 



11. Clayey marl - parting, variable in 



thickness, 2-8 inches 5 



12. Sandy stone, with occasional Gry- 



phtBce 1 8 



10 



13. Yellowish-grey, somewhat ironshot 

 Lower Tri- ragstone, with occasional Gryphcses, 



gonia-grit. Hyperlioceras Walkeri, S. Buckm., 



1 foot 8 inches from base 3 2 



Upper Free- 14. White oolitic stone. Terebratula 

 stone, equi- fimbria. ('Ifoundlyingaboutseveral 



valent. specimens of Terebr. notqroviensis,' 



Mr. 0. Upton, in litt., June 13th, 



1894. [These would be from here 



or lower.]) 



ins. 



1 Not unlike Trigonia signata, Ag. (Lye). 



2 The matrix is rather different from that of the bottom beds in the work-, 

 house quarry. There may be a gap here. 



3 Subsequent Note. — ' In the L. T. G. [Lower Trigonia-grit] I found a rather 

 nice specimen of what I take to be H. [Hyperlioceras] discites, or something 

 akin to it, about 18 inches from the top of the Upper Freestone ; and above 

 that, in a bed which has a somewhat sandy character [probably bed 11], indi- 

 cations of Terebratula Buckmani' — Mr. C. Upton, in litt., June 13th, 1894. 



